Saint Nicholas Orthodox church in Tomaszów Lubelski
Eastern Orthodox church building · Tomaszów Lubelski
Museum
Bełżec Museum and Memorial Site, also known as Museum – Memorial Site in Bełżec is a memorial complex and martyrology museum located on the grounds of the former German Nazi Belzec extermination camp, commemorating approximately 450,000 Jews from Poland and other European countries who were killed there between 1942 and 1943. For nearly 20 years, the former camp grounds remained unmarked and unsecured. The first monument was unveiled there only in 1963. It did not include elements indicating that the victims of the camp were of Jewish nationality and soon began to fall into disrepair. In the second half of the 1990s, based on an agreement between the Polish government and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, work began on a new memorial. On 1 January 2004, the Museum – Memorial Site in Bełżec was established as a branch of the Majdanek State Museum. Six months later, the new memorial complex was unveiled. Both the monument-cemetery and the museum exhibition were positively received by experts and art critics.
Main article: Belzec extermination camp The camp in Bełżec was the first of three extermination centers established by the Germans as part of Operation Reinhard. It operated from March 1942, and its sole purpose was the extermination of the Jewish population. According to Robert Kuwałek, the number of its victims is estimated at approximately 440,000–453,000 people. The vast majority of the victims were Polish Jews, although about 25,000–30,000 Jews from Austria, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Slovakia, and Hungary were also among the murdered. For the German Nazis, the Bełżec camp was a sort of "laboratory" for genocide, and the extermination techniques developed there were later applied in other camps of Operation Reinhard.
In mid-December 1942, the extermination operation in Bełżec was interrupted. At the same time, the Germans began dismantling the camp and erasing traces of the crime. By June 1943, all buildings, fences, and guard towers were demolished. Mass graves were emptied, and the bodies extracted from them were burned on special grills. Young trees were planted on the camp grounds. After some time, a farm was also established there, inhabited by a Volksdeutsche with his family (probably one of the former guards).
In the first post-war years, the site where hundreds of thousands of Jews were murdered remained unprotected and uncommemorated. "Graveyard hyenas" actively operated there, digging up the camp grounds in search of gold and valuables. Instances of profanation also occurred in the second half of the 1950s. A sawmill operated on the grounds of the former camp, and the railway siding used to bring in wagons with victims was utilized for economic purposes. For a long time, the authorities of the Polish People's Republic and state-sanctioned Jewish organizations did not take significant actions to prevent profanation and commemorate the victims. In 1949, a concrete tomb was built to house the remains of victims that were discovered thereafter. In 1954, a decision was made to fence off the camp grounds, but the work was not completed due to a lack of funds.
Amid the Polish October, information about the tragic condition of the camp grounds in Bełżec entered the public sphere, particularly during discussions about the state of the Majdanek State Museum. It was not until 1 December 1963 that, on the initiative of the Council for the Protection of Struggle and Martyrdom Sites, a monument commemorating the victims of the camp was unveiled there. The ceremony was modest and attracted little interest from the official press.
The fenced memorial area covered less than four hectares, encompassing only half of the camp grounds. It contained no elements indicating the Jewish origin of the victims. The central feature of the monument was a crypt-mausoleum in the form of a cube, covered with panels of artificial stone, inside which human remains and objects found at the camp were placed. On one of the walls, an inscription made of metal letters was displayed:
In memory of the victims of Hitlerite terror murdered in the years 1941–1943
After some time, a figurative sculpture by Stanisław Strzyżyński [ pl ] and Jarosław Olejnicki was placed in front of the crypt, depicting two emaciated prisoners, one supporting the other. The sculpture was well received by art critics. However, in the opinion of Robert Kuwałek, it somewhat obscured the historical truth about the camp, as it followed the official narrative about Nazi camps, emphasizing prisoner solidarity. Additionally, by being referred to as the "Bełżec Pietà ", it introduced a "quasi-Christian element" to the site of the extermination of the Jewish population.
In the northern part of the former camp, where the bodies of victims were burned, four concrete " pylons " were erected. The mass graves that could be located were marked with rows of concrete urns with metal covers symbolizing flames. In the early 1980s, the memorial was supplemented with a plaque stating that "600,000 Jews and about 1,500 Poles for helping Jews" were murdered at the camp.
During the era of the Polish People's Republic, and especially after the events of March 1968, Bełżec became, in the words of Kuwałek, a "forgotten camp of the Holocaust ". The memorial was most often visited by residents of nearby towns; visitors from other parts of Poland and foreign guests appeared only sporadically. Plans to create an information point in Bełżec in the form of a kiosk with publications were abandoned. Even in the 1980s, there were cases of the camp grounds being dug up by "treasure hunters". By the early 1990s, the memorial was already significantly neglected. The camp grounds were even used for play, social gatherings, and drinking parties. It was tidied only occasionally, usually through the efforts of pupils from the primary school in Bełżec.
The political breakthrough of 1989 made it possible to undertake efforts to improve the condition of the memorial site. Miles Lerman, the chairman of the museum council of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, whose family was murdered in Bełżec, made significant efforts in this regard. On his initiative, in 1995, the Polish government and the USHMM signed an agreement concerning the construction of a new memorial.
In 1997, an international jury chaired by Prof. Maciej Gintowt [ pl ] resolved a competition for the architectural and artistic design of the new memorial. Nine projects were submitted to the competition. The winning design was by Andrzej Sołyga [ pl ], Zdzisław Pidek [ pl ], and Marcin Roszczyk. The design for the museum building was prepared by architects Marek Dunikowski, Piotr Uherek, Jarosław Kutniowski, and Piotr Czerwiński.
Between 1997 and 2000, archaeological research was conducted on the former camp grounds, led by Prof. Andrzej Kola [ pl ] from the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń. His team managed to find the remains of 33 mass graves, the foundations of camp buildings, as well as numerous objects or fragments of objects that belonged to the victims.
The construction of the new memorial began in 2002. Prof. Jan Grabacki was responsible for the construction, while the substantive support for the museum was provided by the Majdanek State Museum. The construction work was carried out under rabbinical supervision. The previous memorial was dismantled, with only the plaque from the old monument being preserved. About 370 trees that grew on the former camp grounds were also cut down. Only a few oaks were preserved, as dendrological studies indicated that they had grown there even before the extermination center was established.
The main investor on the Polish side was the Council for the Protection of Struggle and Martyrdom Sites, represented by Secretary General Andrzej Przewoźnik. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, however, withdrew from the role of official partner during the project's implementation. As a result, the investor representing the American Jewish diaspora became the American Jewish Committee, represented by Rabbi Andrew Baker. The AJC concluded an appropriate agreement with the USHMM on this matter. Under the 1995 agreement, half of the construction costs were covered by the Polish state and the other half by donors from the United States.
On 1 January 2004, the Museum – Memorial Site in Bełżec was established. It has the status of a branch of the Majdanek State Museum. Its first director was Robert Kuwałek. On 3 June 2004, the new memorial complex was officially unveiled. The ceremony was attended by, among others, President Aleksander Kwaśniewski, representatives of the AJC, ambassadors of Germany, Israel, and the United States, as well as relatives of the victims.
Main article: Belzec extermination camp The camp in Bełżec was the first of three extermination centers established by the Germans as part of Operation Reinhard. It operated from March 1942, and its sole purpose was the extermination of the Jewish population. According to Robert Kuwałek, the number of its victims is estimated at approximately 440,000–453,000 people. The vast majority of the victims were Polish Jews, although about 25,000–30,000 Jews from Austria, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Slovakia, and Hungary were also among the murdered. For the German Nazis, the Bełżec camp was a sort of "laboratory" for genocide, and the extermination techniques developed there were later applied in other camps of Operation Reinhard.
In mid-December 1942, the extermination operation in Bełżec was interrupted. At the same time, the Germans began dismantling the camp and erasing traces of the crime. By June 1943, all buildings, fences, and guard towers were demolished. Mass graves were emptied, and the bodies extracted from them were burned on special grills. Young trees were planted on the camp grounds. After some time, a farm was also established there, inhabited by a Volksdeutsche with his family (probably one of the former guards).
In the first post-war years, the site where hundreds of thousands of Jews were murdered remained unprotected and uncommemorated. "Graveyard hyenas" actively operated there, digging up the camp grounds in search of gold and valuables. Instances of profanation also occurred in the second half of the 1950s. A sawmill operated on the grounds of the former camp, and the railway siding used to bring in wagons with victims was utilized for economic purposes. For a long time, the authorities of the Polish People's Republic and state-sanctioned Jewish organizations did not take significant actions to prevent profanation and commemorate the victims. In 1949, a concrete tomb was built to house the remains of victims that were discovered thereafter. In 1954, a decision was made to fence off the camp grounds, but the work was not completed due to a lack of funds.
Amid the Polish October, information about the tragic condition of the camp grounds in Bełżec entered the public sphere, particularly during discussions about the state of the Majdanek State Museum. It was not until 1 December 1963 that, on the initiative of the Council for the Protection of Struggle and Martyrdom Sites, a monument commemorating the victims of the camp was unveiled there. The ceremony was modest and attracted little interest from the official press.